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In
What Do We Trust? Currency and the Search for Stabiliy
February 19,
2003
By Arthur Eliason
In his
interview for In
the National Interest last week, Maurice R.
Greenberg observed, in response to a question about
exchange rates, "The Euro
has appreciated not because Europe's economy is doing
better than that of the United States, but because of
negative perceptions about the U. S. economy. Once
the war with Iraq is over, we will see an upturn in the
economy, a psychological lift. I believe that we
will see a much-improved U. S. economy in the second
half of 2003."
(http://www.inthenationalinterest.com/Articles/vol2issue6/vol2issue6Greenberg.html)
Perception
is indeed driving economic reality.
There are very real fears about the
stability of the dollar and deep concerns that, in the
event of another paralyzing terrorist strike or a
protracted war with Iraq, the value of the dollar could
quickly erode. Since
mid-2002, when it became clear that the Bush
Administration was intent on including Iraq within the
parameters of the war on terrorism, banks and businesses
around the world, accustomed throughout the 1990's to
considering the dollar the de facto currency of a
globalized world, have been searching for alternate ways
to preserve the value of their assets.
Asian
central banks, in particular, have been shifting a
portion of their holdings from dollars to gold, and this
has led to a steady increase in the price of gold.
On March 8, 2002, gold was valued at $289.15 an
ounce. Two
weeks ago, gold closed at $382.10 an ounce, the highest
price ever in the past five years, although the price
has since declined to the $350 per ounce range (closing
Friday at $351.30).
What is significant about this development is
that the price of gold has more or less appreciated
since February 2002 and is higher now than the
"spikes" that occurred in the gold price in
the run-up to Y2K and in the immediate aftermath of
9/11.
The
other development has been the devaluation of the dollar
vis-à-vis the euro.
Mr. Greenberg is correct to note that this is not
due to any fundamental strengthening of the European
economies at the expense of the American.
After all, when the euro was first unveiled, it
was heralded as an "alternative" to the
dollar, and promptly began a steady decline to the
greenback, reaching its lowest point in October 2000,
when it was worth approximately 80 cents.
Since mid-2002, however, like the price of gold,
the value of the euro has increased, due to perceptions
that the dollar is more volatile.
On December 6, 2002, the euro closed worth more
(on a one-to-one basis) than the dollar, and has
remained the stronger of the two currencies ever since
(this past Friday, one euro was worth approximately
$1.07).
What
will be interesting to observe will be the Russian
reaction to these developments.
The decline of the dollar has not been in
Russia's interest, because most of its energy exports
are denominated in dollar terms, yet most of its imports
come from the EU and are priced in euros; a good deal of
its external debt is also euro-denominated. The decline of the dollar has thus lessened the value of
Russia's energy supplies, cutting into its revenues,
while making its imports more expensive.
Indeed, the fact that many Russian retailers have
switched the so-called "unit" price for goods
from dollars to euros means that Russian consumers have
experienced a six percent increase in prices (in other
words, a good priced at 100 units that in December was
dollar-denominated is now still priced at 100 units, but
pegged to the euro).
It is not accidental that the Russian Central
Bank has tried to stabilize the position of the dollar
in the last month.
Another response might be to accelerate sales of
gold to take advantage of increased demand; Deputy
Industry Minister of Yakutia Vladimir Fedorov recently
announced that this republic, one of the key
gold-producing regions of Russia, was planning to
produce 18 tons of gold in 2003.
At
any rate, it is clear that markets are keeping their
finger of the pulse of Washington.
The fall in the gold price that took place this
past week occurred in part because traders assumed that
the moderate tone of the report presented by Hans Blix
to the UN Security Council meant that the imminence of
war was decreasing.
Yet the sense of walking on a tightrope remains
acute. The
dollar plays an important role in facilitating the
smooth operation of the global economy.
If it falters, there is no immediate successor,
for both gold and the euro have their limitations. And this could be an additional source of economic
instability not only for the United States, but for
international energy and commodity markets.
Arthur
Eliason is an independent consultant in international
business and economic affairs.
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